Skip over navigation

NEN Gallery

NEN Gallery
Home / Culture and Heritage / Essex Record Office / Basildon Local History / 1928 Laindon
Asset 1 of 1 Previous Asset [ 1 ] Next Asset   [Slideshow]

1928 Laindon

Show/Hide_Details
Download:

640 x 323
1967 x 995

Unique Id:

89959

This item is saved in one of your albums. Click to remove it.. My Albums

Laindon in 1928. In the photograph, Churchill and Johnson, the building supplies store, lies between Northumberland Avenue and Station Approach. The pole on the left of the road with the horizontal rods was called a telegraph pole, though by this time it would have been carrying telephone lines. Telegraph was a system of sending messages along electric cables using electrical pulses called morse code; telegraph poles used to be placed alongside railway lines.

Can you stand where the photographer stood in 1928?
What differences do you notice about this view and the present? What similarities are there?

There wasn’t a station at Basildon until 1970. Why did the town corporation not want a station connecting Basildon directly with London?

Added:
26th Sep 2008

Subjects:
Geography, History

Key Stages:
Key Stage 2, Key Stage 3, Key Stage 4

Keywords:
Basildon, local history, railway, map

Related Links:

EXIF data:

National Education Network
Developed by E2BN for the National Education Network
E2B® and E2BN® are registered trade marks and trading names of East of England Broadband Network (Company Registration No. 04649057)